Anyhow, yes, the tangent.
Would it be reasonable to suggest that: Using the scientific method as a tentative guide to how to decide what things we take on board to 'think about' some more we should adopt an initially atheist point of view? E.g. that there is no supernatural phenomenon. From there, we could easily falsify this by actually discovering good indicators of God, Ghosts and Daemons by simply finding them and accounting for them. In this manner, should they exist and be findable, we would then construct our religion reasonably and scientifically (if it were to be constructed at all)?
In this sense, at least, then whilst agnosticism may be our actual belief on the matter, our yard-stick for actually analysing things would be an atheistic starting point.
To draw an example, if I remember its intent correctly, from some other Sciencey stuff I've done in my time: When constructing an experiment you want to have the experiment, the sortof-tangible 'dealing with facts and getting knowledge' part, to be easily disprovable. Thus your hypothesis is "There is no God" would be disproveable by simply detecting God, or useful by highlighting anomalous reasons. Of course, that allows for all sorts of goal-post-shifting, but hey...we're human after all.
Of course, using a more useful hyopthesis (and allowing then for the steady march of science) the atheistic viewpoint would far more sensibly yield conjectures like: "When we do X, Y happens. We cannot otherwise find a causal link between X and Y"
Finding a link between these would be a safe point, and thus steer us clear of any sort of God Hypothesis. Finding no link, however, would lead us to believe there's alot of mystery. If, after a good few dozens centuries (millenia even?) of this sort of process we'd then be able to start testing more obscure bits of supernatural phenomena?
Hmm, my ramble lost alot of coherency there. I should probably see a doctor about that clarity haemorrhaging all over the place...
Quoting oddly familiar from 13:14, 14th Aug 2007Well, science only has something over religion if you say that they are both attempting to explain what the world is like. As Novium said earlier, creationists have built their case on a foundation of sand, because they try and use religion to describe the universe, something which science is much better at. Science describes, religion explains. Unfortunately current religion (well, Abrahamic religions at least, I don't know enough about most of the other religions to comment) are up a creek because they have made assertions as to the state of the universe, statements which can be shown to be false.Quoting Frank from 23:44, 13th Aug 2007
That is: Science, at present, seems to have alot more going for it than alot of other stuff. Perhaps this is extreme selfishness?
Perhaps I should clarify that in my statement above, I'd be more keen to explore (today, at least!) the idea that science is a more useful worldview. That is, regardless of meaning or fact, alot more meaning and fact can be derived, deduced, implied or even speculated at using science as a foundation rather than religion?
That sort of harks back to what I said above, in that if religions have some merit, we should be able to build up to them, eventually, using science and an elimination process rather than simply taking them as given at present?
Quoting oddly familiar from 13:14, 14th Aug 2007
it would be more sensible to start again from scratch.
But then, to pose a question to everyone, what exactly would a religion be that is constructed in this manner? I imagine there's a bazillion books, essays and forums having discussed this is in the past, but I'm quite partial to the The Sinner and its characters. (PAUL, where are you!?)
Would this sort of 'religion' not simply be a morality, a philosophy? A metaphysical view that we pick simply because it is:
1- Consistent
2- Satisfying
and perhaps even just
3- Comforting?
Would that be bad, problematic or indeed worrying? Would God be justified in being angry at us doing that (if He exists at all, or even cares)?
[hr]
"There is only ever one truth. Things are always black or white, there's no such thing as a shade of grey. If you think that something is a shade of grey it simply means that you don't fully understand the situation. The truth is narrow and the path of the pursuit of truth is similarly narrow."

